The Glass Castle and the Invisible Codependent
Feb 13, 09- (by Mama MPJ)
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- Family and Friends, Sober Salon
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Recently, I was sick as a dog, and while I was in bed recovering, I worked my way through several books that had been collecting dust on my beside table for months, including The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls. The book is a memoir about growing up in a deeply dysfunctional family, dominated by an alcoholic father. Every tale of life with addiction is different, but every tale is also the same, so much of the book resonated with me. But at the end, I was left feeling that the whole book could serve as metaphor for codependency, because the story wasn’t really about Jeannette Walls at all.
The majority of the book covers Walls’ life from the age of three through the time she left home, at the age of seventeen. Then it’s as if, once her parents aren’t part of the daily workings of her world anymore and the drama of living with an active and spectacularly dysfunctional addict is gone, she has nothing left to say of herself but “I’m fine now. Nothing to see here. I have a degree and a job and a nice house and a ‘normal’ life. I’m going to go live happily ever after. The end.” And that focus on the addict as the source of all that is interesting and worth telling reminded me of my own story as much as any of the details in the book did.
I remember when I first started going to 12 Step meetings and reaching out to other people who were affected by someone else’s sexual addiction. I was so frustrated that the shares were supposed to focus on us, on the partners. The stories I wanted to hear were about what the addicts had done. “Here’s how my addict hurt me,” I wanted to say, “How did your addict hurt you?” After all, they were the ones out contracting diseases and getting arrested and blowing all of our money; we were just trailing along in the wake of their storm. I had to slowly build the story of my own storm, long unnoticed by me because I was riding in the eye of it. And as I began to heal from the damage done, I started to see that the story of rebuilding and repair needed to be told as much (or more than) the story of how things were ripped apart in the first place.
The Glass Castle tells the story of how mental and emotional scars are formed, but from where I sit now, it leaves out the most interesting part: the work of self-discovery and healing.
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Excellent points. So much more satisfying to put the focus on the “bad” guy so to speak. That way we never have to address our own issues. Perfect. Thanks for that much needed reminder.
thanks for the great article….this is what the world need now….check out my blog also.. http://visionmapvideo.blogspot.com/ keep up telling it like it is…
happy blogging
darlene
When I started this book I kept thinking that there must have been something that happened to the parents to cause such dysfunction. The part of me that yearns for answers wants to know where it starts. How many generations back does it go? Why did it start? Is there something about some times that make it easier for people to fall through the cracks? And how odd - that desire to live apart in a Bohemia of sorts. That was creepy because I have this bohemian-wannabe streak that’s a mile wide and I only want to identify with the child who rises above, not the parent.
That part in the Bible where they say the sins of the fathers will be visited on the sons for seven times seven generations - when I was religious that was one of the parts I hated. I put it off to Man writing down God’s words and getting them skewed. As an atheist, the scales have fallen (hehe) and I see it’s a Truth: deal with your demons or they will be visited on your progeny
The book is beautifully written but I want the sequel, and unfortunately, the story of recovery isn’t ever as “interesting” as the story of dysfunction, so it may not get written. I have been at parties where people have laughed so hard at my husbands tales of his childhood they had tears running down their faces. “What? Your parents took you to a nudist colony? For real?” Nothing in recovery is as entertaining as that. We’re not even tempted to tell those stories. I can’t make them funny enough for public exposure.
But boy do I have a thirst for that genre! Which is why I read blogs.
Thanks, Mich.
GentlePath, I like that about the Bible. I’m finding that it is helping me to reinterpret some of the religious statements I grew up with to fit the way I now see the world. I’m no longer Christian, but being able to put things I saw as harsh in a more loving context as an adult is helping me come to terms with my past. And that part of the Bible was one I had trouble with too. Thanks for the reframing!